Any refer experts out there? I'm overhauling mom's refer handling to make it fully MLA compliant, and I've encountered two issues.
The first is that refer doesn't appear to recognize named glyphs in a refer database, eg "Encyclop\[ae]dia Britannica" comes out as "Encyclop dia Britannica" and "Antoine de St-Exup\['e]ry" as "Antoine de St-Exup ry". Is there a solution to this, or a known workaround? The second is that MLA style dictates that when citing two or more works by the same author in a bibliography, the author's name, after the first occurrence, should be replaced by a long dash or three hyphens, eg Blow, Joe. _His First Novel_. City: Publisher, date. ---. _His Second Novel_. City: Publisher, date. Is there a refer command to accomplish this? I've studied man refer upside-down and sideways but can't seem to find one. If there isn't one, I've come up with an icky kludge: .char \[duplicate] \v'-.3m'\l'3m'\v'.3m'\& \"Define the long dash .[ blow first .] .[ blow second %A \C'Blow2'\[duplicate] .] The replacement %A field in the second entry requires a name for sorting purposes, but the name has to be reliably hidden from output, so I need an escape that does nothing whatsoever when you plug in an arbitrary string, and furthermore emits no error message. Is \C the best choice, or is there another? -- Peter Schaffter Author of The Binbrook Caucus http://www.schaffter.ca